| Standing screen display size | 15.6 Inches |
|---|---|
| Max Screen Resolution | 1920 x 1080 Pixels |
| Processor | 2.2 GHz core_i5 |
| RAM | 8 GB DDR3L SDRAM |
| Memory Speed | 2.7 GHz |
| Hard Drive | 1 TB SATA |
| Graphics Coprocessor | NVIDIA 940M |
| Chipset Brand | NVIDIA |
| Card Description | Dedicated |
| Graphics Card Ram Size | 2000 MB |
| Wireless Type | 802.11ac |
| Number of USB 2.0 Ports | 1 |
| Number of USB 3.0 Ports | 2 |
| Average Battery Life (in hours) | 5 Hours |
Acer Aspire E5-573G 15.6-Inch Laptop (Intel Core i5-5200U, 8 GB RAM, 1 TB Hard Drive, Windows 10 Home), Black
We don't know when or if this item will be back in stock.
| Brand | acer |
| Model Name | E5-573G |
| Screen Size | 15.6 Inches |
| Color | Charcoal Gray |
| Hard Disk Size | 1 TB |
| CPU Model | Core i5 |
| Ram Memory Installed Size | 8 GB |
| Operating System | Windows 10 |
| Special Feature | HD Audio |
| Graphics Card Description | Dedicated |
About this item
- Intel Core i5-5200U 2.2 GHz (3 MB Cache)
- Windows 10
- 8 GB DDR3L SDRAM
- 1 TB 5400 rpm Hard Drive
- 15.6-Inch Full HD Screen, NVIDIA GeForce 940M with 2GB VRAM
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|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Customer Rating | 4.1 out of 5 stars (600) | 4.5 out of 5 stars (35954) | 4.5 out of 5 stars (1698) | 4.5 out of 5 stars (432) | 3.1 out of 5 stars (107) | 4.5 out of 5 stars (4427) |
| Price | Unavailable | $343.00$343.00 | $599.00$599.00 | $799.00$799.00 | $199.99$199.99 | $476.63$476.63 |
| Sold By | — | SAVEABIZ | BESTDEAL(Serial Number recorded) | PROSALE (SN Recorded) | cousinjay (SN recorded) | Amazon.com |
| Computer Memory Size | 8 GB | 4 GB | 8 GB | 8 GB | 2 GB | 8 GB |
| CPU Model Manufacturer | Intel | AMD | Intel | Intel | Intel | AMD |
| CPU Speed | 2.2 GHz | 3.52 GHz | 3.6 GHz | 2.4 GHz | 1.1 GHz | 4 GHz |
| Display Resolution Maximum | 1920 x 1080 pixels | 1920 x 1080 | 1920x1080 pixels | 1366 x 768 pixels | 1366 x 768 | 1920 x 1080 pixels |
| Screen Size | 15.6 inches | 15.6 inches | 15.6 inches | 14 inches | 14 inches | 15.6 inches |
| Display Technology | LED | LED | LED | LED | LED | LED |
| Hard Disk Size | 1 TB | 128 GB | 256 GB | 128 GB | 16 GB | 256 GB |
| Item Dimensions | 15.02 x 10.08 x 1.15 inches | 14.31 x 9.74 x 0.71 inches | 14.31 x 9.86 x 0.71 inches | 12.88 x 9.49 x 0.78 inches | 9.3 x 13.1 x 0.7 inches | 14.31 x 9.86 x 0.71 inches |
| Item Weight | 5.29 lbs | 3.97 lbs | 5.20 lbs | 3.31 lbs | 3.20 lbs | 3.88 lbs |
| Operating System | Windows 10 | Windows 10 Home | Windows 10 Home | Windows 10 S | Windows 10 Home | Windows 11 |
| Processor Count | 2 | 2 | 4 | 2 | 1 | 6 |
| RAM Type | DDR3 SDRAM | DDR4 SDRAM | DDR4 SDRAM | DDR4 SDRAM | SDRAM | DDR4 SDRAM |
| Wireless Communication Standard | 802.11ac | 802.11ac | 802.11ax | 802.11ac | 802.11ac | Bluetooth, 802.11ax |
Product Description
Product Description
Acer Aspire E5-573G-52G3 comes with these high level specs: 5th Generation Intel Core i5-5200U Processor 2.2GHz with Turbo Boost Technology up to 2.7GHz, Windows 10, 15.6" Full HD Widescreen Comfy View LED-backlit Display, NVIDIA GeForce 940M with 2GB of dedicated DDR3 VRAM, 8GB DDR3L Memory, 1TB SATA Hard Drive (5400RPM), Secure Digital (SD) card reader, 802.11ac Wi-Fi featuring MU-MIMO technology, Bluetooth 4.0, Gigabit Ethernet, Built-In Webcam, 3 - USB 3.0 Ports, 1 - USB 2.0 Port, 1 - HDMI Port, 4-cell Li-ion Battery (2500 mAh), Up to 5-hours Battery Life, 5.29 lbs. | 2.4 kg (system unit only) (NX.MVRAA.004)
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Product information
Technical Details
| Brand | acer |
|---|---|
| Series | E5-573G |
| Item model number | E5-573G-52G3 |
| Hardware Platform | PC |
| Operating System | Windows 10 |
| Item Weight | 5.29 pounds |
| Product Dimensions | 15.02 x 10.08 x 1.15 inches |
| Item Dimensions LxWxH | 15.02 x 10.08 x 1.15 inches |
| Color | Charcoal Gray |
| Processor Brand | Intel |
| Number of Processors | 2 |
| Computer Memory Type | DDR3 SDRAM |
| Hard Drive Interface | eSATA |
| Hard Drive Rotational Speed | 5400 RPM |
| Power Source | Corded Electric |
| Voltage | 240 Volts |
| Batteries | 1 Lithium Ion batteries required. (included) |
Additional Information
| ASIN | B012IBOCRU |
|---|---|
| Customer Reviews |
4.1 out of 5 stars |
| Best Sellers Rank | #69,046 in Computers & Accessories (See Top 100 in Computers & Accessories) #13,466 in Traditional Laptop Computers |
| Date First Available | August 16, 2015 |
Warranty & Support
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What's in the box
From the manufacturer
Acer Aspire E 15 E5-573G-52G3 15.6-inch Full HD Notebook - Gray (Windows 10)
Don’t settle for less
The new Aspire E Series laptops provide a comprehensive range of choices for every-day users, with many appealing features and an attractive design aesthetic that exceed expectations. With incredible performance, convenient connectivity and a textured surface, the Aspire E series is a good bit better at delivering a good bit more.
- 5th Generation Intel Core i5-5200U Processor 2.2GHz with Turbo Boost Technology up to 2.7GHz.
- Windows 10
- 15.6" Full HD Widescreen ComfyView LED-backlit Display (1920 x 1080 resolution; 16:9 aspect ratio).
- 8GB DDR3L Dual Channel Memory
- NVIDIA GeForce 940M with 2 GB of DDR3 VRAM.
- 1TB 5400RPM SATA Hard Drive
- 802.11ac WiFi featuring MU-MIMO technology.
- 10/100/1000 Gigabit Ethernet LAN (RJ-45 port).
- Bluetooth 4.0
- HD Webcam (1280 x 720)
- Acer TrueHarmony High-Performance Sound System.
- Acer TrueHarmony High-Performance Sound System.
- Digital Media Card Reader - Secure Digital (SD) Card.
- 2 - USB 3.0 ports (1 with power-off charging).
- 1 - USB 2.0 Port
- 1 - HDMI Port with HDCP support.
- Precision Touchpad
- 4-cell Li-Ion (2500 mAh) Battery with Up to 5-hours battery life.
Beautiful Form
Every detail of the Aspire E 15 Notebook has been carefully crafted for a clean and smooth look without unnecessary lines. The stylish textile pattern on the notebook’s top cover and underside not only helps prevent scratches, but provides a tactile feel that brings a nice grip and makes it comfortable to hold. The smart undercut design on the front and rear edge compliments the look and makes it easy to open the lid with just one hand.
Essential ports are easily accessible and designed to keep connected cables out of your way. Two fast USB 3.0 ports provide up to 10x faster transfer speeds than the standard USB 2.0, and one even supports power-off charging. Just plug in and charge your gadgets while your notebook is asleep and leave those bulky device power adapters at home.
With the Skype-certified Aspire E15 you can call, video chat, message, and share files seamlessly with superior audio and visual quality. The Webcam ensures that every word is heard clearly while high quality audio lets you speak effortlessly at normal volume and the sharp display makes you look great too.
Sensational Effects
The large 15.6-inch Full HD ComfyView LED-backlit LCD Display with a 16:9 widescreen aspect ratio delivers an optimal viewing experience. Spending several hours at a time on your laptop? Acer BluelightSheld technology protects your eyes from potentially harmful blue-light emission, reducing eye strain and fatigue over extended periods.
NVIDIA GeForce 940M graphics with 2GB of discrete video memory gives games an adrenaline shot with incredible performance and futuristic, visually-stunning graphics. Experience heart-pounding, cinematic visuals on your favorite games!
Acer TrueHarmony delivers lifelike and rich audio that takes entertainment to the next level. The one-of-a-kind speaker design limits audio distortion, delivers a wide range of bass, and boosts volume so that it fills the room. The custom equalizer ensures movies come to life, songs have more depth, and games are even more engaging.
Functions Better
Better? You bet. With premium performance and stunning visuals, the new fifth gen Intel Core i5 processor has the power to take your computing to a new level. Watch movies and experience exceptionally smooth, seamless video chats with friends. Enjoy amazing battery life that keeps you productive on the go.
The Acer E15 Notebook brings speed to another level. Equipped with the latest 802.11ac wireless featuring MU-MIMO technology, experience up to 3x faster performance, when connected to an 802.11ac based router, making everything from online gaming to streaming video both faster and more reliable.
Acer's Precision Touchpad makes touch control as accurate and gestures as smooth as on a touchscreen. Pinch, flick and swirl your fingers on the Touchpad for an intuitive navigation of web pages, photos and more.
The latest Bluetooth 4.0 version lets you wirelessly connect to Bluetooth-enabled devices like mobile phones, speakers, and headphones – for cable-free work and play.
Windows 10
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It’s familiarWindows 10 is familiar and easy to use, with lots of similarities to Windows 7 including the Start menu. It starts up and resumes fast and is designed to work with software and hardware you already have. |
It’s productiveMicrosoft Edge lets you write or type notes directly on webpages and share them with others, read online articles free of distraction, and save your favorite reads for convenient access later. |
It’s flexibleBrowse the new Windows Store on your PC, tablet, or phone and easily download great free and paid digital content including apps, games, music, movies, and TV shows. |
It’s personalInteract with your device however you want. Just by talking, you can ask Cortana to set a reminder or write an email, and chat with friends and family on Skype. |
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on Amazon-
Top reviews
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2016-02-15, sold by and shipped from Amazon.com. This product family is
currently the value leader in the categories of desktop replacement
and entry level gaming. Overall the machine is excellent, but with a few
compromises that have to be taken into account. I'm giving it 4 stars.
I use my laptop 100% in Linux (OpenSuSE 42.1) for software development,
document preparation, system administration across the net, and web page
maintenance.
Pro factors:
* You get unbeatable bang for the buck.
* Aesthetics. We can debate whether you want your new laptop in crow
color, but if you can accept that black is beautiful, Acer's industrial
designer has done a good job making it look handsome, not tacky. This
model has a charcoal color keyboard deck; Amazon stocks a few models
with white decks.
* Touchpad. Out of the box in Windows 10 and Linux it is very civilized
and I have not been tempted to change the speed and acceleration.
Compared to my old Sony Vaio it is much more resistant to stray touches
and palm strikes. The reviewer who was bothered by swoopy and twitchy
behavior needs to get into the Pointer Options property tab and restore
the defaults, i.e., slow it down to about 50%, and put back Enhance
Pointer Precision (i.e. acceleration). To get three buttons in Linux
see the synaptics man page, the SoftButtonAreas option. Percent
dimensions recommended.
Con factors -- as always, it's a lot easier to criticize than to congratulate.
* Display. For my use case the screen is fine, but you aren't going to
be doing digital art on this screen. You should do it on a different
machine, like I do. The colors on other displays are "richer": it
looks like the lightness is turned up, reducing the saturation. On
Linux as a future project I can make my own CMS matrix and I hope to be
able to de-tweak the colors. For viewing angles, horizontally the
colors are reasonably constant in +-20deg and I call them legible in
+-60deg. Vertically there is really no constant color range; call it
decent in +30 to -20deg and legible in +45 to -35deg. An IPS display
would be so much nicer, and the small extra cost would definitely be
worth it. Suggestion to Amazon: commission products with upgraded
screens, particularly for the 17.3in models.
* The Case. I look back fondly to the Dell Inspiron 3800 (year 2000):
after removing one screw you could just slide the drive cage out the
side, which is important when sending the machine in for warranty
repair. The bottom had a door closed by one screw behind which you had
easy access to the memory sockets and the BIOS battery. To get the
bottom cover off the Acer you need to remove 21 screws and then you get
to deal with the grabbers. But I've seen worse -- disassembling the
Acer is at least feasible.
* Keyboard. The keys have a good feel, don't miss keystrokes, and don't
double strike. But they are noisy, and this will bother some people's
wives.
* Battery. It is not removable, so you could not take a spare battery
with you, and you have to disassemble the machine to disconnect power.
On a related point, battery life is reasonable but far from spectacular;
I measured 2.4 hours playing MPEG-4 continuously, 18 watts measured.
Estimated for software development etc. is 2.7 hours (16W); the estimate
for Windows similarly lightly used is 4.8 hours (9W). There is a PC
Magazine review of this machine where they played MPEG-4 continuously in
Windows for 8 hours. Obviously Windows knows some power management
tricks that Linux doesn't.
Hurdles for the Linux user, which you will need to work around:
* GPU. The nVidia GeForce 940M (GPU GM108M) is fine in Windows but is
not recognized by current versions of xf86-video-nouveau for Linux. The
usual way to handle this is to install the x11-video-nvidia package,
which downloads the nVidia proprietary driver. Beside security and
political issues, this driver is fixated on the distro's stock kernel,
which does not support Wi-fi and the touchpad. However, the integrated
Intel HD Graphics 5000 is completely adequate for desktop replacement
uses and appears to be as good as my old Vaio's GPU (which was bought
as a gaming machine).
* Wi-fi. The laptop uses the Qualcomm-Atheros QCA9377 chip, which is
quite new. If you reinstall Windows it may or may not be necessary to
download a recent driver (I didn't test). On Linux the ath10k_pci
driver is used, and it gained support for this chip starting in kernel
4.4.0, the most recent. In the likely case that your distro is not up to
the minute in the kernel version and you wish to use the stock kernel,
the Atheros community has an aggressive backport program, and Ubuntu
15.04 "Vivid Vervet" (not OpenSuSE) includes the backported driver
with the official distro.
* Touchpad. Similar to Wi-fi, it's working in 4.4.0 and not in 4.1.5. Edit:
this is a bad interaction with a touchpad firmware bug. In BIOS set the
pad for Basic mode and it will work including acceleration and scroll gestures.
Earliest report found that it works: kernel 4.0.8.
* UEFI booting. My distro has a signed kernel image and supports UEFI
booting, including Secure Boot, and the installer can be UEFI booted,
but so far I have not figured out the secret to making the installed OS
boot on this machine, and nobody else reports success. You will have to
use legacy booting for Linux. BIOS version 1.25 has a bug that prevents
reading a partition table with Linux partition types. It's essential to
upgrade the BIOS (using Windows) before trying to install Linux.
Version 1.35 is current, and works for me.
* Suspend to RAM or Disc. Suspend to RAM was tried in Windows 30
times in succession with no failures. The outcome was not so good in
Linux; it appears that there is yet another BIOS bug, which Windows must
compensate for. On line power if you suspend to RAM or disc the machine
always freezes. You need a hack script that takes the non-boot CPUs
offline. See the Arch Linux wiki page for Acer Aspire E5-573. With
this script, hibernation (S4, suspend to disc) worked 30 times in
succession. S3 (suspend to RAM) had about 10% probability of not
waking, when I left it asleep or awake for 15 seconds at each step of the
test. [Edit:] I repeated the test with 5 minutes per step, and it woke 30
times error free, which is a very welcome development.
So my conclusion is, this machine has a lot of good features, but there
are some significant issues on which you will have to be willing to
compromise, and Linux support has not caught up to some important
features.
I was pretty grossed out by Windows 10 at first, but I have to admit it's growing on me. It looks nice and is intuitive, but I feel like they've removed a lot of user control as far as things like updates and various personalization options go. I had to consult a Google search in order to figure out how to disable automatic Windows updates. It was one of the first things I did and set a bad precedent for fiddling around in the control panel. Ultimately, I emerged victorious from my battle with my computer settings.
If you're considering getting this for gaming like I did, it's a decent choice for its price. Most games in my Steam library run at 60FPS with ultra settings at full resolution. Some of them can stutter unless I turn down the anti-aliasing a notch. The majority of them are fairly recent (within two years) AAA games, as well.
Speaking of the resolution, it's 1920x1080 (1080p), so there's a lot of space on the screen that took some getting used to after using a craptop limited to 1366x768 for several years, but having said that: the screen itself is pretty meh. You want to be looking at it dead on if you don't want everything to wash into negative colors. I've used worse options, though. As an aside, I don't know if it's a Windows 10 feature or if it's the fault of Acer, but the brightness dims and.. well, brightens, depending on the color of the background of whatever you're doing. It's distracting and despite my attempts I can't seem to disable it unless the laptop is plugged in.
The keyboard is nice. It's full sized, so there's a numpad. The function and control keys aren't switched around infuriatingly, so that's a plus. The enter key and backspace aren't weirdly sized, so that's another plus. Strangely, the power button is also a key, and I've accidentally put the laptop to sleep a handful of times when trying to use the function keys to switch songs in Spotify. I don't like that the up and down arrow keys are half the size they should be and kind of squeezed together, but all the other keys are spaced out a bit. You know you're hitting those two when you feel them, is what I'm saying. It's also pretty quiet when typing, although my Skype friends would disagree.
There's tons of bloatware that you're gonna want to uninstall once you have it. This is pretty standard, but no less irritating.
The hinges of the screen are solid. It's actually a bit of a struggle to open the thing because of the lip of it over the bottom half sticking out like it does. Hopefully those don't loosen too much after heavy use. I generally leave it open anyway unless I'm traveling.
The battery is insane, in both "this is fantastic" and "this thing is possibly schizophrenic" ways. Close to six hours if I'm just browsing the internet, but it'll dip below 3 if I start playing a game or something, likely due to the movement of the fan which I will warn you gets VERY hot. The vent placement is okay, but it's no wonder the gaps are so large because it'll make you sweat if not burn you (I've got an actual brand from an HP that did exactly this). Cooling pad is an absolute MUST.
I think I legitimately despise the touchpad. It's not as responsive to precise movements as I'd like, and I have a lot of issues right-clicking when I mean to left-click. I don't know how this ever passed QA testing. You might disagree, but under the "frequently bought together" there's a gaming mouse and mousepad. I already had a mouse when I bought it, and I'm really, REALLY happy for that fact.
My biggest complaint about it, though, is just how cheap it feels. It's really light plastic that makes me think I'm going to break it every time I pick it up, and you can watch it (gently) bend under your the press of your fingers. I've had Acer machines before and none of them lasted very long for one hardware reason or another. This concerns me greatly, considering I spent a fair chunk of change on this machine. I don't want it falling apart on me in a year's time. Maybe things have changed since my last Acer machine a few years back and I'm just being overly paranoid/cautious, but I'm really hoping to keep this one around for a while.
I'd recommend it if someone asked me about an affordable laptop that isn't just a Netflix machine, but I'd also warn them about the caveats. Let this review do the same for you.




























